I will translate it to English and try to sing it, John. But remember, I
sing really bad. When I was a kid, used to call it "poetic freedom",
"artistic reinterpretation", hahahaha!!! <3
All Cecilias love to create new visions of art, hahahaha!!! ;D
https://youtu.be/lrZ3bytd2J0
Obs: - Saint
Thanks Ceci. Sorry for missing the part about it being a Brazilian
song, the Oda name threw me off ;)
cheers
John
On October 18, 2019 3:53:26 AM UTC, Cecilia Tanaka
wrote:
>It's a Brazilian song for kids and John was joking with me, my dear,
>because the original Nobunaga Oda was a brilliant
>
> Wow, I had no idea Nobunaga wrote such poetry ;)
>
> I know he almost conquered Japan, was assassinated by one of his
> vassals, Akechi Mitsuhide, and his most ruthless vassal Hideyoshi paved
> the way for Tokugawa. And he supposedly really liked sugary treats that
> the Portuguese brought
On October 18, 2019 1:00:54 AM UTC, Cecilia Tanaka
wrote:
>On Thu, Oct 17, 2019, 17:49 Cecilia Tanaka
>wrote:
>
>>
>> There is an old Brazilian song for kids that always makes me smile,
>> sweetie... Its name is "The History Of A Kitten" and my favorite
>verses
>> since my earlier childhood
On Thu, Oct 17, 2019, 22:20 rooty wrote:
>
> Ty much for the entertainment sir.
Hmm... I am still a girl, honey.
You are one of a kind. Could someone serve me up a juicy unsubscribe link
Here, in the end:
https://lists.cpunks.org/mailman/listinfo/cypherpunks
Good luck, Good Life... Take
Ty much for the entertainment sir. You are one of a kind. Could someone serve
me up a juicy unsubscribe link
Original Message
On Oct 17, 2019, 6:11 PM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 17, 2019, 20:19 rooty wrote:
>
>> Ty sea sea for wonderful words. I'm tired of hearing
On Thu, Oct 17, 2019, 20:19 rooty wrote:
>
> Ty sea sea for wonderful words. I'm tired of hearing the same shit
> parroted day after day after day after day.
Ah, I think a bad marriage is probably something similar to this,
hahahaha!!! So, I prefer the fun version, baby bot. At least, I can
On Thu, Oct 17, 2019, 17:49 Cecilia Tanaka wrote:
>
> There is an old Brazilian song for kids that always makes me smile,
> sweetie... Its name is "The History Of A Kitten" and my favorite verses
> since my earlier childhood are:
>
>
> "WE, CATS, WERE BORN IN POVERTY
> HOWEVER, WE WERE BORN
Now, I'm sending to the list, also.
On Thursday, October 17, 2019, 05:23:40 PM PDT, jim bell
wrote:
Okay, I'm not advocating (or opposing) this concept. It just seemed to me
that since we are talking TOR-related features, we should pay attention to what
TOR currently claims to
On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 11:11:41PM +, coderman wrote:
> ‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
> On Thursday, October 17, 2019 10:31 PM, Punk wrote:
> > ...
> > ok, so that's actually one of, or the most fundamental requirement. The
> > connection between user and 'network' HAS to have a fixed
Ty sea sea for wonderful words. I'm tired of hearing the same shit parroted day
after day after day after day. I'm moving over to here https://www.minds.com/
Bye bye
Original Message
On Oct 17, 2019, 1:49 PM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 16, 2019, 16:36 rooty wrote:
>
"an alarming report that the national supply of oil will be entirely
used by within just 25 or 30 years more at the rate that the country
is currently burning through the precious and decidedly finite fuel
source"
The Cheapest Oil Ever Sold
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, October 17, 2019 8:00 PM, Peter Fairbrother
wrote:
> ...
> Reminds me of one of the solutions to Reagan's "Trust, but Verify"
> policy: (supposedly-) unclonable speckle patterns were painted on ICBMs
> etc, and when they wanted to make sure the
On Wed, Oct 16, 2019, 16:36 rooty wrote:
>
> Hi hi sea sea - try and stay positive honey. Sometimes all negativity here
> is hard but you can do it.
Hi Hi, baby bot... Hope you are feeling happy, serene, and hopeful.
I know it will sound strange for you, but I feel really comfortable here.
On Wednesday, October 16, 2019, 12:03:21 PM PDT, John Young
wrote:
>Swarm of disclosure/discussion servers is much better than the very
few famous seducing users and making it easy to intercept and plant
malware. Even so, Tor, WikiLeaks, SecureDrop, Signal, et al, are most
useful to
On 17/10/2019 17:43, jim bell wrote:
Phys.Org: Cryptography without using secret keys.
https://phys.org/news/2019-10-cryptography-secret-keys.html
Reminds me of one of the solutions to Reagan's "Trust, but Verify"
policy: (supposedly-) unclonable speckle patterns were painted on ICBMs
etc,
Neowin: New OnionShare 2.2 update makes it easy to share files and host sites
on the Tor network.
https://www.neowin.net/news/new-onionshare-22-update-makes-it-easy-to-share-files-and-host-sites-on-the-tor-network/
ZDNet: Tor Snowflake turns your browser into a proxy for users in censored
countries.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/tor-snowflake-turns-your-browser-into-a-proxy-for-users-in-censored-countries/
Phys.Org: Cryptography without using secret keys.
https://phys.org/news/2019-10-cryptography-secret-keys.html
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